Bordetella pertussis immunogenic vaccine compositions

ABSTRACT

This invention is directed to composition, vaccines, tools and methods in the treatment and prevention of  Bordetella pertussis . In particular, the invention is directed to a three-pronged approach that involves removal of the nonessential vaccine components, use of a nondenatured, genetically detoxified mutant, and adding virulence factors.

REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 15/131,674 filed Apr. 15, 2016, which issued at U.S. Pat. No. 10,076,563 On Sep. 18, 2018, which claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/148,529 filed Apr. 16, 2015, all of which are specifically and entirely incorporated by reference.

SEQUENCE LISTING

The instant application contains a Sequence Listing which has been submitted electronically in ASCII format and is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety. Said ASCII copy, created on May 10, 2016, is named 3036.010.USCN_SL .txt and is 12,050 bytes in size.

1. FIELD OF THE INVENTION

This invention is directed to composition, vaccines, tools and methods in the treatment and prevention of Bordetella pertussis. In particular, the invention is directed to a three-pronged approach that involves removal of the nonessential vaccine components, use of a nondenatured, genetically detoxified mutant, and adding virulence factors.

2. BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Introduction of whole-cell pertussis (wP) vaccines in the late 1940s resulted in a rapid reduction in both the incidence of pertussis and death caused by the infection. However, the success of these vaccines was undermined by concerns over safety issues. Thus, they were replaced with acellular pertussis (aP) vaccines in the late 1990s in many developed countries (1). Since then, pertussis cases have increased and dramatic epidemic cycles have returned. In 2012, 48,277 cases of pertussis and 18 deaths were reported to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), which represents the greatest burden of pertussis in the United States in 60 years and similar outbreaks are occurring in other countries (2-4). However, the epidemiology of contemporary pertussis does not replicate that of the pre-vaccine era. Disease is now more common in infants and older children (ages 9 to 19) and, strikingly, these older children are often fully vaccinated according to current recommendations yet develop pertussis (5, 6). Ominously, studies that have analyzed pertussis incidence among children that were born and vaccinated during the transition to aP vaccines have found that the rate of infection is significantly higher among children vaccinated with only aP vaccines compared to those vaccinated with even a single dose of wP vaccine (7). To combat the rise of infections in this group, regulatory agencies have called for boosters to be administered earlier (8). The benefit of boosting with aP vaccines is at best unclear because it is unknown whether the re-emergence of pertussis is due simply to waning immunity or to fundamental differences in the nature of the immune response induced by aP vaccines compared with wP vaccines or with natural infection.

The increased incidence of disease among older children and also adults is especially worrisome because of the corresponding risk of transmission to non- or incompletely-immunized infants (9). Compounding the problem, antibiotic treatment has minimal efficacy by the time most diagnoses are made and severe cases can be unresponsive to standard therapies for respiratory distress, such as mechanical ventilation (10). This re-emergence of pertussis as a global public health problem presents many challenges. For example, needed are vaccines that have an acceptable safety profile, provide long-lasting immunity, reduce infection burden and prevent transmission. Also needed are therapeutic agents and treatment strategies that reduce morbidity and mortality in vulnerable populations (11). Clearly, a strong need exists for improved pertussis vaccines.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

The present invention overcomes the problems and disadvantages associated with current strategies and designs and provides new tools, compositions and methods for the treatment and prevention in infection by Bordetella pertussis and related organisms.

One embodiment of the invention is directed to an immunogenic B pertussis vaccine composition comprising a genetically detoxified pertussis toxin (PT); a genetically detoxified pertussis adenylate cyclase toxin (ACT); an immunogenic oligosaccharide or fragment thereof derived from the lipooligosaccharide of B pertussis having one or more of the antigenic determinants of the endotoxin to a carrier protein or peptide; a TLR agonist to induce a protective cell-mediated response against B pertussis wherein when provided to a mammal said composition: produces neutralizing anti toxin antibodies against B pertussis; produces direct bactericidal antibodies against B pertussis; elicits a pertussis toxin-specific Th1/Th17 cell response; generates IFN-δ and IL-17 cytokines wherein said cytokines permit recruitment of neutrophils; and reduces nasopharyngeal colonization and carriage of B. pertussis in the vaccine recipient. Preferably the genetically detoxified pertussis toxin is produced in E. coli. Also preferably genetically detoxified mutants of pertussis toxin are produced in B. pertussis. Preferably the genetically detoxified AC toxin has the primary amino acid SEQ ID NO 1. Preferably the vaccine of the invention induces the production of anti-PT and anti-ACT neutralizing and bactericidal antibodies against B. pertussis.

Another embodiment of the invention is directed to an oligosaccharide conjugate comprising a genetically detoxified pertussis toxin (PT); a genetically detoxified pertussis adenylate cyclase toxin (ACT); an immunogenic oligosaccharide or fragment thereof derived from the lipooligosaccharide of B pertussis having one or more of the antigenic determinants of the endotoxin to a carrier protein or peptide; a TLR agonist to induce a protective cell-mediated response against B pertussis. Preferably the oligosaccharide comprises one or more of the oligosaccharides of Formula 1, Formula 2 or Formula 3 of FIG. 2. Also preferably, the pentasaccharide of Formula 3 is synthetic or is a deamination product of the B. pertussis LOS. Preferably the oligosaccharide comprises a B. pertussis LOS-derived oligosaccharide (OS) or its fragment and the B pertussis derived detoxified toxin (dPT), and the oligosaccharide comprises a B. pertussis LOS-derived oligosaccharide (OS) or its fragment and the pertussis derived detoxified toxin (dACT). Preferably the TLR agonist is a TLR-2, a TLR-4 or a TLR-8.

Another embodiment of the invention is directed to methods of immunizing a mammal with the vaccine of claim 1 to prevent disease caused by B. pertussis.

Another embodiment of the invention is directed to methods of immunizing a mammal with the vaccine of claim 1 to reduce nasopharyngeal colonization and carriage by B. pertussis.

Other embodiments and advantages of the invention are set forth in part in the description, which follows, and in part, may be obvious from this description, or may be learned from the practice of the invention.

DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 depicts the Sequence ID No 1 amino acid sequence of a B. pertussis detoxified adenylate cyclase toxin.

FIG. 2 depicts the structure of the dodecasaccharide core of B. bronseptica LOS (Formula 1); the structure of the pentasaccharide hapten obtained by deamination of the LOS of B. pertussis strain 186 (Formula 2); and the structure of a synthetic B pertussis epitope distal LOS trisaccharide equipped with a spacer and a terminal aldehyde (Formula 3).

DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

The increased incidence of disease among older children and also adults is alarming. Compounding the problem, antibiotic treatment has minimal efficacy by the time most diagnoses are made and severe cases can be unresponsive to standard therapies for respiratory distress. This re-emergence of pertussis as a global public health problem presents many challenges. Needed are vaccines that have an acceptable safety profile, provide long-lasting immunity, reduce infection burden, and prevent transmission.

It has been surprisingly discovered that pertussis vaccine treatments can be created with a three-pronged approach. Step one involves removal of the nonessential vaccine components. Step 2 involves improving the essential component PTx by using a nondenatured, genetically detoxified mutant, one of which has been shown to be a better immunogen than the chemically modified PTx at a smaller (1/5) dose (12, 13). Step three involves adding virulence factors such as adenylate cyclase toxin and lipooligosaccharide conjugates to broaden the immune response (21, 22). This third step provides: (i) antiprotein antibodies, the duration of vaccine and disease-induced IgG antiprotein wanes, so that maximal level declines about 10-fold in 2-5 y (14-17); (ii) older children and adults were not immunized with cellular pertussis vaccines because of adverse reactions, leaving many nonimmune individuals (18); (iii) according to AlisonWeiss: “booster immunization of adults with acellular pertussis vaccine was not found to increase bactericidal activity over preimmunization levels. Promoting bactericidal immune responses can improve the efficacy of pertussis vaccines” (19); and (iv) the primary action of pertussis vaccines is serum IgG anti-toxin immunity that blocks the inactivating action of PT on phagocytic cells thus allowing them to opsonize the B. pertussis, i.e. the antibodies elicited by acellular or whole cell vaccines do not directly kill the pathogen. There is also the “herd” immunity effect of pertussis vaccines that reduces the coughing thus resulting in decreased transmission of B. pertussis in the susceptible population. Similar to the effect induced by widespread immunization with diphtheria toxoid, this indirect effect of antitoxin accounts for the incomplete immunity of both vaccines on an individual basis (approximately 71%). Because vaccineinduced IgG antibodies to the surface polysaccharides of Gram negative pathogens induce a bactericidal effect and immunity, the lipooligosaccharide (LOS) of B. pertussis could be a potential vaccine component (20) which could be more effective at producing a sterilizing immune response and reduce bacterial carriage and thus the incidence of disease. B. pertussis endotoxin lacking a typical O-antigen and thus constitutes a lipooligosaccharide. B. pertussis LOS is composed of a lipid A, a core oligosaccharide and a distal trisaccharide which is a single oligosaccharide unit (52,53). Among B. pertussis strains there are also strains having LOS devoid of the terminal trisaccharide, which exhibit lower virulence.

B. pertussis secretes several toxins, one of which adenylate cyclase toxin (ACT) only emerges after the infection takes place. Once whooping cough bacteria attaches to cells in the bronchi, a gene in the bacteria switches on and as a result, ACT toxin which acts like a force-field against the immune system, is produced. ACT stops the immune system from recognizing the bacteria and gives the bacteria about a two week advantage until the immune system wakes up to the fact it has been duped. In the case of natural whooping cough immunity, ACT or adenylate cyclase toxin forms the basis of the initial immune response. That front-line immune response is not only critical for eliminating the first round of pertussis bacteria, but also crucial for removing the bacteria upon later reinfection. Whether or not one is vaccinated, the infected individuals still becomes colonized when the bacteria is circulating. The difference being that the vaccinated individuals will stay colonized longer and be more likely to develop some degree of cough, which is how pertussis is spread. In natural immunity the body reacts very strongly to ACT, but because of original antigenic sin (33), and the absence of ACT in the vaccine, the vaccinated are not programmed to respond at all to it. Vaccines do not boost antibody to this toxin because as of yet, that antigen is not in the vaccine. The naturally convalescent sera have over 17 times the amount of antibody to ACT than DTaP recipients have, and more than 9 times what DTP vaccinated have as measured after pertussis infection (23). Bordetella pertussis adenylate cyclase-hemolysin (AC-Hly), directly penetrates target cells and impairs their normal functions by elevating intracellular cAMP. Active immunization with purified B. pertussis AC-Hly or AC (a fragment of the AC-Hly molecule carrying only the adenylate cyclase activity but no toxin activity in vitro) protects mice against B. pertussis intranasal infection (50). Immunization with AC-Hly or AC significantly shortens the period of bacterial colonization of the mouse respiratory tract. Furthermore, B. parapertussis AC-Hly or AC are also protective antigens against B. parapertussis colonization; their protective activities are equivalent to that of the whole-cell vaccine (50). In a murine model, AC-Hly may play an important role in Bordetella pathogenesis. If this factor plays a similar role in the human disease, its use as a protective antigen could reduce not only the incidence of the disease, but also the asymptomatic human reservoir by limiting bacterial carriage. Therefore, an object of this invention is to add ACT in a more effective B pertussis vaccine formulation.

Vaccine adjuvants have been developed, but underlying concerns about safety will make their introduction into third generation pertussis vaccines destined for use in infants challenging. Nevertheless, adjuvants, antigen delivery systems and routes of administration for pertussis vaccines targeting adolescents and adults warrant investigation.

The present invention also includes a method for immunizing adolescent and adults with a vaccine containing adjuvants that polarize the immune response towards a Th1/th17 cell response. Acellular Pertussis vaccines (aP) are composed of individual B. pertussis antigens absorbed to alum and promote strong antibody, Th2 and Th17 responses, but are less effective at inducing cellular immunity mediated by Th1 cells. In contrast, whole-cell Pertussis vaccines (wP), which include endogenous Toll like receptor (TLR) agonists, induce Th1 as well as Th17 responses. The identification and characterization of novel TLR2-activating lipoproteins from B. pertussis (24). These proteins contain a characteristic N-terminal signal peptide that is unique to Gram negative bacteria and we demonstrate that one of these lipoproteins, BP1569 activates murine dendritic cells and macrophages and human mononuclear cells via TLR2. A corresponding synthetic lipopeptide LP1569 with potent immunostimulatory and adjuvant properties was able to enhance Th1, Th17 and IgG2a antibody responses induced in mice with an experimental Pa, and conferred superior protection against B. pertussis infection than an equivalent vaccine formulated with alum (24).

Analysis of T cell responses in children demonstrated that Pa promote Th2-type responses, whereas Pw preferentially induce Th1 cells (25,26). It has also been reported that the superior long term protection induced by wP in mice, when antibody responses had waned significantly, was associated with the induction of potent Th1 responses (27). More recently it has been reported that Th17 cells also play a role in protection induced by natural infection or immunization with wP (28-31).

Genetically detoxified pertussis toxin (dPT) can be obtained and mutants of pertussis toxin suitable for vaccine development can be obtained (43,44a, 44b). dPT-induced Th17 expansion is counter regulated by the PI3K pathway. For its properties and being already used in humans as vaccine Ag in pertussis, dPT may represents a valid candidate adjuvant to foster immune protective response in vaccines against infectious diseases where Th1/Th17 are mediating host immunity (45). As an example, pertussis toxin mutants, Bordetella strains capable of producing such mutants and their use in the development of antipertussis vaccines are described in U.S. Pat. No. 7,666,436. Pertussis toxin (PT) mutants are described being immunologically active and having reduced or no toxicity, characterized in that at least one of the amino acid residues Glu129, Asp11, Trp26, Arg9, Phe50, Asp1, Arg13, Tyr130, Gly86, Ile88, Tyr89, Tyr8, Gly44, Thr53 and Gly80 of subunit S1 amino acid sequence is deleted and substituted by a different amino acid residue selected in the group of natural amino acids.

Bordetella strains capable of providing and secreting said PT mutants and means and methods for obtaining them are also described. The Bordetella strains and the PT mutants produced by them are particularly suitable for the preparation of effective cellular and acellular antipertussis vaccines.

Adenylate cyclase toxin is another important virulence factor secreted by B. pertussis (and also by other closely related Bordetella species). It is an immunogenic protein and can elicit a protective immune response, but it has not been included as a component of acellular pertussis vaccines. ACT consists of an amino terminal adenylate cyclase (AC) domain of approximately 400 amino acids and a pore-forming repeat in toxin (RTX) hemolysin domain of approximately 1300 amino acids with significant homology to E. coli hemolysin. ACT is secreted from B. pertussis by a type I secretion ‘channel-tunnel’ mechanism formed by the CyaBDE proteins, and is then modified by fatty acylation on two specific lysine residues in the hemolysin domain mediated by the CyaC acyltransferase (35). Studies in mouse models established ACT as an important virulence factor for B. pertussis infection (36-38). A point mutant of B. pertussis with abolished AC catalytic activity was greater than 1000 times less pathogenic to newborn mice than wild-type bacteria, directly demonstrating the importance of the AC toxin in pertussis virulence. Similarly, an in-frame deletion mutant of B. pertussis that lacks HLY is equally avirulent, supporting observations that the HLY domain plays a critical role in AC toxin entry into cells. Furthermore, the genetically inactivated AC toxin produced by the point mutant is antigenically similar to the native toxin. This strain may be useful in the development of pertussis component vaccines (37). Using PT and ACT deficient mutants it is proposed that PT acts earlier to inhibit neutrophil influx and ACT acts later to intoxicate neutrophils (and other recruited cells) once present at the site of infection (39). Neutralizing antibodies to adenylate cyclase toxin promote phagocytosis of Bordetella pertussis by human neutrophils (40). Immunization with AC-Hly, or AC could prevent colonization of the lungs, and reduce asymptomatic carriage, not only of B. pertussis, but also of other Bordetella pathogens for humans. Adenylate cyclase (AC) toxin from Bordetella pertussis is a 177-kDa repeats-in-toxin (RTX) family protein that consists of four principal domains; the catalytic domain, the hydrophobic domain, the glycine/aspartate rich repeat domain, and the secretion signal domain (41). The AC toxin of B pertussis can be produced as a genetically detoxified recombinant form in E coli. These recombinant toxins can be produced among others, in the E. coli strain BL (Novagen, Madison, Wis.) by using expression vectors that are derivatives of the pTRACG plasmid (42).

In a preferred embodiment, the Pertussis vaccine formulation comprises a genetically detoxified recombinant pertussis toxin (rPT). Priming to PT, a major virulence factor present in all aP vaccines, could be misdirected due to chemical (specifically formaldehyde) detoxification processes used during production, which removes up to 80% of surface epitopes. Chemical detoxification reduces immunogenicity of PT and could lead to original antigenic sin i.e., utilization of immune memory to the PT vaccine epitopes to produce antibodies that are ineffective against a wild-type strain in response to subsequent doses/exposure (32-34).

In another preferred embodiment is directed to vaccines that comprise in addition to dPT a detoxified adenylate cyclase toxin (dACT). PT plays an important early role for B. pertussis infection by delaying the influx of neutrophils to the site of infection during the first 24 to 48 h post inoculation and that ACT then plays an important role in the intoxication of recruited neutrophils after the interaction of the bacteria with these cells. ACT is known to enter cells efficiently after binding to the CD11b/CD18 integrin receptor present on neutrophils and to have deleterious effects on neutrophil activities, and after a study on the closely related pathogen Bordetella bronchiseptica, neutrophils were identified as the major target cells for ACT in promoting infection. Therefore, these toxins may provide a one-two punch on neutrophil recruitment and activity that is essential for optimal infection and colonization of the respiratory tract by B. pertussis.

In another embodiment, the invention comprises a lipo oligosaccharide conjugate to generate bactericidal antibodies effective at producing a sterilizing immune response and reduce bacterial carriage and thus the incidence of disease. In another preferred embodiment the vaccine comprises a core oligosaccharide derived from the B pertussis lipo oligosaccharide endotoxin having one or more of the antigenic determinants of the endotoxin conjugated to a carrier protein or peptide.

In another embodiment, the invention provides a Pertussis vaccine formulation comprising a Toll-like receptor (TLR), preferably a TLR4 or TLR2 agonist as an adjuvant to shift the immune response towards a Th1/Th17 cell response to mediate protective cellular immunity to B. pertussis. Evidence shows that genetically detoxified pertussis toxin (dPT)-induced Th17 expansion is counter regulated by the PI3K pathway. For its properties and being already used in humans as vaccine Ag in pertussis, dPT may represents a valid candidate adjuvant to foster immune protective response in vaccines against infectious diseases where Th1/Th17 are mediating host immunity (45).

The following examples illustrate embodiments of the invention, but should not be viewed as limiting the scope of the invention.

Example 1 Construction of cyaA Mutants

Construction of cyaA mutants was performed on a 2.7-kilobase (kb) BamHI-EcoRI fragment of cyaA subcloned in pUC19 and expressed in E. coli (47). A mutant cyaA fragment carrying a selectable marker approximately equidistant between the two regions of cyaA to be specifically mutated was created by insertion of a 1.6-kb BamHI kanamycin-resistance cassette from pUC4-KIXX (Pharmacia) into the Bcl I site of cyaA. Oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis to substitute methionine for lysine at position 58 of cyaA was performed as described (47) to produce the mutant cyaA fragment used for the creation of the AC-point mutant strain A2-6. Excision of a 1047-base-pair pflMI fragment of cyaA and religation produced the mutant cyaA fragment used for the creation of the HLY-deletion mutant strain 32-5 which lacks amino acids 469-817 of the cyaA toxin. All of the mutant cyaA fragments were subsequently excised from pUC19 and ligated in the appropriate orientation into a recombinant pSS1129 vector carrying an additional 2-kb BamHI fragment from directly upstream of cyaA. Mutant strains of B. pertussis were created by conjugative transfer of these recombinant pSS1129 vectors and selection for genetic recombination, according to the method of Stibitz et al. (48). Allelic exchange of the AC- or HLY-mutant cyaA gene was accomplished in a two-step process to ensure that genetic recombination did not occur outside cyaA. The chromosomal cyaA was first marked with a selectable phenotype by homologous recombination of the kanamycin resistance insertion mutation into B. pertussis, creating AC- and HLY-strains (S7c2). In the second cycle, the marked chromosomal gene was replaced with either the ACpoint mutation or the HLY-deletion mutation; recombination at the appropriate site was confirmed by phenotype analysis and either Southern (49) or immunologic blot analysis. The amino acid sequence of a detoxified CyaA variant sequence of Bordetella pertussis is shown in FIG. 1.

Example 2 Construction of Oligosaccharide Conjugates

Oligosaccharide conjugates of B. pertussis endotoxin and bronchiseptica induce bactericidal antibodies, an addition to pertussis vaccine, such conjugates are easy to prepare and standardize; added to a recombinant pertussis toxoid, they may induce antibacterial and antitoxin immunity (20, 46). The endotoxin core oligosaccharide can be obtained from the B. bronchiseptica RB50 LPS core OS structure which is similar to that of B. pertussis Tohama I and Tax 113, with an additional component, an O-SP. The dodecasaccharide core of B. bronchiseptica RB50 (FIG. 2A) without its O-SP (commonly referred to as “band A”) can easily be separated on a Bio-Gel P-4 column, activated and conjugated to carrier protein. B. bronchiseptica is also a logical production strain to obtain the endotoxin core oligosaccharide because it is easier to grow than B. pertussis.

Example 3 Construction of the Pentasaccharide

The pentasaccharide part of the conjugate is a fragment isolated from the LOS of B. pertussis 186 and comprises distal trisaccharide, heptose and anhydromannose. Pentasaccharide-TTd conjugate can induce antibodies which were able to bind to B. pertussis in immunofluorescence assays (FACS). The terminal pentasaccharide of the lipooligosaccharide from B pertussis strain 186 can be generated after extraction of bacterial cells by the hot phenolwater method and purified by ultracentrifugation (51). The pentasaccharide can be selectively cleaved from the LOS by treatment with nitrous acid. Briefly, the lipooligosaccharide (50 mg) was suspended in a freshly prepared solution (180 ml) containing water, 5% sodium nitrite, and 30% acetic acid (1:1:1, vol/vol/vol) and incubated for 4 h at 25° C., and this was followed by ultracentrifugation (200,000 g, 2 h). The supernatant was freeze-dried, and the product was purified on a column of Bio-Gel P-2 (Bio-Rad), yielding 10 mg of pentasaccharide which structure is shown in FIG. 2 (Formula 2), and analyzed by MALDI-TOF MS and NMR spectroscopy.

Example 4 Forming an Immunogenic Oligosaccharide-Protein Conjugate

Synthetic trisaccharide (distal trisaccharide residues A, D, E) of structure shown in FIG. 2 (Formula 3) equipped with a spacer linker with a terminal aldehyde or other appropriate functional group were prepared with a conjugate immunogen to raise an antibody against such trisaccharide that would interact with B. pertussis LOS in vivo and promote agglutination, phagocytosis, and bacterial killing, as well as neutralizing the endotoxic activity of the LOS.

Formation of an immunogenic oligosaccharide-protein conjugate either or each of the dodecasaccharide (FIG. 2) or pentasaccharide or terminal trisaccharide (FIG. 2) is coupled to protein carriers by direct coupling of the reducing end KDO residue, or 2,5 anhydromannose of the pentasaccharide by reductive amination (with or without a linker) and condensation with primary amino groups of the carrier protein. Alternatively, the immunogenic conjugates of the invention may be prepared by direct coupling of the oligosaccharide by treatment with a carbodiimide forming a carboxylate intermediate which readily condenses with primary amino groups of the carrier protein. Preferred carrier proteins include, but are not limited to, CRMs, tetanus toxoid, diphtheria toxoid, cholera toxin subunit B, Neisseria meningitidis outer membrane proteins, pneumolysoid, C-β protein from group B Streptococcus, non-IgA binding C-β protein from group B Streptococcus, Pseudomonas aeruginosa toxoid, pertussis toxoid, synthetic protein containing lysine or cysteine residues, and the like. The carrier protein may be a native protein, a chemically modified protein, a detoxified protein or a recombinant protein. Conjugate molecules prepared according to this invention, with respect to the protein component, may be monomers, dimers, trimers and more highly cross-linked molecules.

Other embodiments and uses of the invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art from consideration of the specification and practice of the invention disclosed herein. All references cited herein, including all publications, and all U.S. and foreign patents and patent applications are specifically and entirely incorporated by reference. The term comprising, where ever used, is intended to include the terms consisting and consisting essentially of. Furthermore, the terms comprising, including, and containing are not intended to be limiting. It is intended that the specification and examples be considered exemplary only with the true scope and spirit of the invention indicated by the following claims.

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The invention claimed is:
 1. A method of manufacturing an immunogenic composition comprising a detoxified pertussis toxin, a detoxified pertussis adenylate cyclase toxin, a Toll-like receptor agonist and an immunogenic oligosaccharide or fragment thereof, wherein the method comprises: detoxifying a pertussis toxin obtained from E. coli, B. bronchiseptica, or B pertussis forming the detoxified pertussis toxin; detoxifying a pertussis adenylate cyclase toxin containing the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO 1 obtained from E. coli, B. bronchiseptica, or B pertussis forming the detoxified pertussis adenylate cyclase; combining the detoxified pertussis toxin and the detoxified pertussis adenylate cyclase with the Toll-like receptor agonist and the immunogenic oligosaccharide or fragment thereof, obtained or derived from a lipooligosaccharide of B pertussis, wherein the immunogenic oligosaccharide or fragment thereof is conjugated to a carrier protein or peptide; and forming the immunogenic composition.
 2. The method of claim 1, wherein the pertussis toxin is detoxified genetically.
 3. The method of claim 1, wherein the pertussis adenylate cyclase is detoxified genetically.
 4. The method of claim 1, wherein the immunogenic oligosaccharide or fragment thereof comprises one or more of the oligosaccharides of the structure of: a dodecasaccharide core of B. bronseptica lipooligosaccharide, or a pentasaccharide hapten obtained by deamination of the lipooligosaccharide of B. pertussis strain
 186. 5. The method of claim 1, wherein the lipooligosaccharide of B pertussis comprises a lipid A, a core oligosaccharide, and a distal trisaccharide.
 6. The method of claim 5, wherein the distal trisaccharide comprises heptose or anhydromannose.
 7. The method of claim 1, wherein the lipooligosaccharide of B pertussis comprises a spacer and a terminal aldehyde.
 8. The method of claim 1, wherein the lipooligosaccharide of B pertussis comprises a synthetic B pertussis epitope.
 9. The method of claim 8, wherein immunogenic oligosaccharide or fragment thereof comprises a spacer and a terminal aldehyde distal to the epitope of B pertussis.
 10. The method of claim 1, wherein the lipooligosaccharide of B pertussis is devoid of a terminal trisaccharide.
 11. The method of claim 1, wherein the immunogenic oligosaccharide or fragment thereof comprises the formula:


12. The method of claim 1, wherein the immunogenic igosaccharide or fragment thereof comprises the formula:


13. The method of claim 1, wherein the immunogenic oligosaccharide or fragment thereof comprises the formula: α-GlcNAc-4β-ManNAc3NAcA-3-β-FucNAc4NMe-1-linker-R; wherein R═-CH═O; —COOH or —CH2-SH.
 14. The method of claim 1, wherein the lipooligosaccharide comprises a synthetic or a deamination product obtained or derived from B. pertussis.
 15. The method of claim 1, wherein the detoxified pertussis toxin and the immunogenic oligosaccharide or fragment thereof are obtained or derived from B pertussis.
 16. The method of claim 1, wherein the Toll-like receptor agonist comprises TLR-2, TLR-4 or TLR-8.
 17. The method of claim 1, wherein the immunogenic composition is aqueous.
 18. The method of claim 1, wherein the immunogenic composition is lyophilized.
 19. The method of claim 1, wherein the lyophilized immunogenic composition is suspended in a liquid prior to use. 